Bruce MacLaury

Bruce MacLaury

President Emeritus
The Brookings Institution

Bruce MacLaury became the eighth president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis on July 1, 1971, following the death of Hugh Galusha.

MacLaury was not new to the Federal Reserve System. His introduction came at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, where he was a research assistant in the summer of 1957. Following his doctoral studies at Harvard University, MacLaury took a position as an economist in the foreign research division at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in 1959, rising to the title of vice president, foreign.

During his tenure at New York, MacLaury was granted leaves of absence for a special assignment with the office of the Under Secretary of the Treasury for Monetary Affairs and another to serve as an economic officer at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in Paris, France.

After ten years with the New York Fed, MacLaury joined the US Treasury Department as deputy under secretary for monetary affairs from 1969 until he came to the Minneapolis Fed. At Treasury, he assisted Paul Volcker on debt management and international issues. Upon his departure from Treasury, MacLaury was given the department’s exceptional service award; he was cited for his efforts in the development of the Securities Investor Protection Act.

MacLaury called the East Coast home, having been born in Mt. Kisco, New York, and educated at Princeton and Harvard universities; however, he eagerly accepted the presidency at the Minneapolis Fed.

MacLaury continued much of his predecessor’s work in progress, for example, the construction of the new Reserve Bank building, community visits throughout the Ninth Federal Reserve District and the Baconian Dialogues begun by Galusha in 1966. The three-day programs featured speakers from around the country, and topics varied from “The Implications of Technology” to “Religion and the World.”

MacLaury also took an active role in monetary policy discussions. In one of his first public actions as Minneapolis Fed president, MacLaury urged President Richard Nixon to adopt an income policy to restrain wage and price increases to stabilize the economy.